Top employers for flexible and work-at-home jobs

For great perks, nice campuses, and a strong esprit de corps, the employers on Fortune’s list of the best companies to work for are hard to top. But what if you’re looking for a job that might let you work from home or from some other remote location, at least part of the time?

Legitimate work-at-home jobs do exist, but “it can be really hard to find real openings with all the scams and bogus business opportunities out there,” notes Sara Sutton Fell, CEO of FlexJobs. A team of researchers at the site have checked out their work-at-home job listings to make sure they are on the level before they post them.

FlexJobs reports a 25% increase in mobile or work-at-home jobs in 2013, mostly because technology has made it practical to do more kinds of work remotely. “We’re still surprised by some of the positions we come across,” says research director Kelly Kirby — including senior analyst, nursing case manager, account executive, accountant, software developer, webmaster, and virtual teacher.

Some of the companies using technology to hire and train people over greater distances, she adds, are big names in their industries, like Apple AAPL, Xerox xrx, UnitedHealth Group UNH, Dell, ADP ADP, and American Express axp.

Each year, FlexJobs publishes a list of the 100 employers who posted the most work-at-home and remote jobs in the preceding 12 months. The top 25 on the current list:

Job hunters who aren’t looking to telecommute right now, but think they might be someday, can use Flexjobs’ list to check out which companies already seem most receptive to the idea, Sutton Fell adds. “It can be helpful to know which employers to keep an eye on.”

For great perks, nice campuses, and a strong esprit de corps, the employers on Fortune’s list of the best companies to work for are hard to top. But what if you’re looking for a job that might let you work from home or from some other remote location, at least part of the time?

Legitimate work-at-home jobs do exist, but “it can be really hard to find real openings with all the scams and bogus business opportunities out there,” notes Sara Sutton Fell, CEO of FlexJobs. A team of researchers at the site have checked out their work-at-home job listings to make sure they are on the level before they post them.

FlexJobs reports a 25% increase in mobile or work-at-home jobs in 2013, mostly because technology has made it practical to do more kinds of work remotely. “We’re still surprised by some of the positions we come across,” says research director Kelly Kirby — including senior analyst, nursing case manager, account executive, accountant, software developer, webmaster, and virtual teacher.

Some of the companies using technology to hire and train people over greater distances, she adds, are big names in their industries, like Apple AAPL, Xerox xrx, UnitedHealth Group UNH, Dell, ADP ADP, and American Express axp.

Each year, FlexJobs publishes a list of the 100 employers who posted the most work-at-home and remote jobs in the preceding 12 months. The top 25 on the current list:

Job hunters who aren’t looking to telecommute right now, but think they might be someday, can use Flexjobs’ list to check out which companies already seem most receptive to the idea, Sutton Fell adds. “It can be helpful to know which employers to keep an eye on.”